It’s not just humans, but human’s closest relatives that have also been affected by the Covid-19 pandemic.
At least two gorillas at California’s San Diego Zoo have caught the coronavirus, the first known instance of natural transmission to great apes, officials said Monday.
Two primates began coughing last week and have since tested positive for Covid-19, while a third is showing symptoms, Governor Gavin Newsom said.
They are thought to have contracted the virus from an asymptomatic zoo worker, though this has yet to be confirmed.
“Aside from some congestion and coughing, the gorillas are doing well," the world-famous zoo’s executive director Lisa Peterson said in a statement.
“The troop remains quarantined together and are eating and drinking. We are hopeful for a full recovery."
Gorillas share up to 98 percent of their DNA with humans, and studies have found that some non-human primates are susceptible to Covid-19 infection.
It is not yet known if the gorillas will have a serious reaction to the disease that has killed 1.94 million humans, or if other troop members have also been infected.
The San Diego Zoo Safari Park, where the gorillas are kept, has been closed to visitors since early December as record cases began surging through Southern California.
Workers are all required to wear personal protective equipment such as masks when near the gorillas, the zoo said.
In April 2020, as the pandemic had just started taking global roots, the first instance of transfer onto pets: a cat from Hong Kong was reported.
Following this, in end-April, two pet cats in New York tested positive for the coronavirus, marking the first confirmed cases in companion animals in the United States.
The first dog to test positive for the coronavirus in the United States died in July. By end July, transmission onto pets in other countries had also started being reported, with cats in Britian, a tiger at the Hong Kong Zoo, and minks in Netherlands farms.
(With inputs from AFP.)
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